Bezzecchi claims Italian MotoGP to extend lead

Published June 1, 2026 Updated June 1, 2026 09:20am

MUGELLO: Marco Bezze­cchi won the Italian MotoGP on Sunday to strengthen his bid for a first world title, as Marc Marquez finished seventh on his comeback from injury.

Starting from pole, the Aprilia rider won his battle with fellow Italian Francesco Bagnaia who ended up third behind Bezzecchi’s team-mate and closest title challenger Jorge Martin.

Bezzecchi’s triumph ruined rivals Ducati’s centenary celebrations on home turf.

Ducati’s Bagnaia, a three-time winner in Mugello from 2022 to 2024, led the race until there were 10 laps left when Bezzecchi made his move before Spaniard Mar­t­in also moved past the Italian to drop him down to third.

Bezzecchi leads Martin by 17 points in the championship standings after winning his fourth grand prix from the seven raced so far this season.

The 27-year-old crossed the line over three seconds ahead of Martin.

“It’s incredible. Winning at Mugello is something I’ve dreamed of since I was a child, so to achieve it is truly amazing,” said Bezzecchi.

“Thank you from the bottom of my heart. Today we went there, we had fun. Thank you all guys, you are fantastic,” he added in a message to the fans who streamed on to the circuit.

Bezzecchi was overtaken by Bagnaia, who started sixth on the grid,at the start of the third lap, but stayed on his countryman’s tail and took charge on lap 14 with a daring move to the front.

Bezzecchi sped off into the distance while Bagnaia tried and failed to hold off Martin and just about fended off atta­cks from Japan’s Ai Ogura.

“It was really tough beca­u­se in the last laps I was struggling a lot with the rear grip,” Bagnaia said. “I saw that the Aprilias were doing a fantastic job. I just tried to leave no space for Ai. But thanks to eve­ryone, thanks to my team that did a fantastic job. We really deserve this kind of results.”

Bezzecchi’s win was a perfect end to the weekend for Aprilia after Martin broke the Mugello speed record dur­ing Saturday’s sprint with an astonishing 368.6 kilometres per hour.

Marc Marquez had threatened the podium on his ret­u­rn from a shoulder surgery and a broken foot suffered in a spectacular crash at the French MotoGP earlier this month.

The injury kept him out of the main race at Le Mans as well as the last race weekend in Barcelona, and he flagged towards the end, losing his battle with Pedro Acosta and slipping down the placings.

Ogura finished less than a tenth of a second behind Bag­­n­aia while VR46 Rac­ing’s Fa­bio Di Giannantonio roun­d­ed out the top five.

Published in Dawn, June 1st, 2026